Affiliation:
1. London School of Economics
2. MIT Sloan School of Management
Abstract
The detailed analysis of the Bitcoin network and its main participants. The expert authors (Igor Makarov, London School of Economics, Antoinette Schoar, MIT Sloan School of Management) completed the study authorized by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), the US-based private agency. The Bitcoin network is defined as a new database comprising many of public and proprietary sources to link bitcoin address to real object, and an extensive set of algorithms to extract information on market key players behavior. Three major pieces of analysis of the Bitcoin eco-system were conducted. First, the authors analyze the transaction volume and network structure of the main participants on the blockchain. Second, they document the concentration and regional composition of the miners which are the backbone of the verification protocol and ensure the integrity of the blockchain ledger. Finally, they analyze the ownership concentration of the largest holders of Bitcoin. The researchers found that 1/3 of all bitcoins issued were owned by 10,000 individual investors. They conclude that the high concentration makes the first cryptocurrency market vulnerable to hypothetical hacker attack. The translator notes that paraphrasing English text in Russian was rather challenging due to the newness of the financial agenda and introduction of the term entity extensively used in the Western countries though new to Russia. Nevertheless, it is necessary to introduce readers to the bitcoin technology which will be also practical and useful for the library and information community.
Publisher
State Public Scientific-Technical Library
Reference26 articles.
1. Abadi J. and Brunnermeier M. (2018). Blockchain economics. Working Paper 25407, National Bureau of Economic Research.
2. Athey S., Parashkevov I., Sarukkai V., and Xia J. (2016). Bitcoin Pricing, Adoption, and Usage: Theory and Evidence. Research Papers 3469, Stanford University, Graduate School of Business.
3. Biais B., Bisiere C., Bouvard M., and Casamatta, C. (2019). The blockchain folk theorem. The Review of Financial Studies, 32 (5):1662–1715.
4. Bondy J. and Murty U. (2008). Graph Theory. Springer Publishing Company, Incorporated, 1st edition.
5. Budish E. (2018). The economic limits of bitcoin and the blockchain. Working Paper 24717, National Bureau of Economic Research.